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Jokes : Philosophical Thoughts on Joking Matters

Jokes : Philosophical Thoughts on Joking Matters

List Price: $9.00
Your Price: $8.10
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Very good intro to humor studies
Review: Cohen's pithy but enterprising volume is not only fun to read but he builds a suprisingly sound idea of the joke-work as an aesthetic bond between two or more. This was refreshing in itself as so many now seem to think of jokes as offensive before they begin, or at best as an offensive against political dullards and people with whom we don't agree.

Cohen doesn't fall into this standard academic rap, and so his arguments were a novelty.

I especially enjoyed the joke based on Niels Abel's commutative groups, as I didn't realize that mathematicians had a sense of humor that was parlayed into such odd and exquisite visions.

The ending was an attempt to take on the morality of joking in an age in which almost everyone is offended by everything from dust to sun-rises. While Cohen says go ahead and be offended, he also says to not try to outlaw other people's sense of humor. I felt he set up a Catch-22 that needed more work. On what basis is it reasonable to be offended?

Is it ever reasonable?

Unfortunately, the book ended in this snag of ook after seventy good pages building a model of the joke-work as a mode of appreciation. To end with the Maoist stalemate that has held culture in a quagmire of contention was less than cheering, not that I myself know any way out of that quagmire of ooky skook.

Thank heavens jokes live on. Some of these are really unusual, and Cohen's commentary is always scintillating. Bravo! I am tickled that this book was written and published. Everyone in America should have a heavily annotated copy under their pillow and we would begin to have a civilization worthy of the zig-zags and ziggurats of the star-bellied Sneetches.

-- Kirby Olson, Author
Comedy after Postmodernism

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Very good intro to humor studies
Review: I might as well admit up front that I didn't buy this book. In fact, Ted Cohen gave me a complementary inscribed copy so that I could reinvigorate my cocktail party repetoire of jokes (my wife says this book will add at least 5 years to our marriage). But for all of you who read this review, you should know that I intend to buy a few dozen copies to distribute to my best friends. And not because Ted needs the money, but because this book is both a scream and thought provoking. If only for laughs, it's well worth the price. And the publisher has considerately type-set the many jokes in bold so that you can easily skip the philosophy. But after you've read the jokes, I recommend you go back and read Ted's thoughts and commentary. You'll see jokes and joking in a new light. Thank you Ted!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: I Wish I Had Bought It!
Review: I might as well admit up front that I didn't buy this book. In fact, Ted Cohen gave me a complementary inscribed copy so that I could reinvigorate my cocktail party repetoire of jokes (my wife says this book will add at least 5 years to our marriage). But for all of you who read this review, you should know that I intend to buy a few dozen copies to distribute to my best friends. And not because Ted needs the money, but because this book is both a scream and thought provoking. If only for laughs, it's well worth the price. And the publisher has considerately type-set the many jokes in bold so that you can easily skip the philosophy. But after you've read the jokes, I recommend you go back and read Ted's thoughts and commentary. You'll see jokes and joking in a new light. Thank you Ted!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: maybe i'm biased, i dunno...
Review: ted cohen is bleeding hilarious. he's even funnier in person than on paper. he happens to be my philosophy professor - ain't i lucky?

buy that book!!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Includes an Index of Jokes
Review: The index of this book is called the "Index of Jokes by First Line, Punch Line, and Subject." I was in high school when "Science is a sacred cow" was a joke. I would bet that it is one joke that does not appear in this book, simply because there isn't anything in the index listed for science, sacred, or cow. As a philosopher, Ted Cohen is ideally situated to be able to assert that a joke is just a particular kind of contrivance, but it also happens, sometimes, that a joke "embodies some profound understanding of things." The acknowledgments of this book, while mentioning "those who have done me the blessed favor of laughing at my jokes," approaches perfection in describing his wife as being "very nearly infallible" in the very important matter of "the consideration of jokes with regard to predicting who will like them and who will not." In our comic society, these people may be closer to understanding the meaning of existence than the clerk on page 73 who said, "This is a hardware store."

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Philosophy AND Jokes - What more could you want?
Review: This is the first book I have read by Ted Cohen but it will not be my last. Do not be frightened away by the word "philosophy." Everyone seems to grasp the fact that some jokes work with some people and not with others. This book shows us how jokes depend on a "complex set of conditions" in order to work and that jokes are "conditional." The book has a wonderful cadence allowing room for the philosophy behind and the intimacy caused by good joke telling and -- great jokes too. Laughter is indeed the best medicine -- grab this book and have a laugh!


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